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06.10.2007 22:02, Vlad Proklov

And please translate the butterflies into Russian. Ognevki, mikro, pyadenitsy... I don't think there will be a lot of translations.


That I could...

Hydrelia flammeolaria - Yellow moth
Hydrelia sylvata - Alder moth Hypomecis punctinalis
- Smoky birch
moth Perizoma affinitatum - Related moth
Xanthorhoe spadicearia - Single - toothed forest moth
Amphipoea lucens - Light spring scooper Chortodes pygmina
- Reddish stem
scooper Cirrhia icteritia - Golden raspberry
scooper Polypogon plumigeralis-Brown moth
scooper Lathronympha strigana - St. John's wort eye leafworm
Acleris holmiana - flat
white-spotted leafhopper Agapeta zoegana - cornflower
leafhopper Semioscopus avellanella - spring downwing moth
Likes: 1

06.10.2007 22:40, Grigory Grigoryev

You need to take Lampert, he was a "big dreamer" in this regard, and each species was necessarily given a Russian name.

07.10.2007 9:56, Ilia Ustiantcev

Thanks! I'm just looking for Lampert, but he's got a big one there.************************************ with Latin names, and the search is very complicated, not to mention about the absence of fire signs in the book. Recently, I searched for a long time for the butterfly polia bombycina, which, when viewing synonyms on the internet, turned out to be mamestra advens...

This post was edited by Ilya U - 07.10.2007 10: 07

07.10.2007 10:26, Ilia Ustiantcev

Is Hypsopygia costalis by any chance a haymaker?

08.10.2007 9:37, Guest

Does anyone have a list of British Isles diaries?

08.10.2007 15:42, Vlad Proklov

Does anyone have a list of British Isles diaries?

wink.gif What do you think?"
Vovochka


The British Isles is, I take it, with Ireland?"
A list with regular migrants, but no rare migrants. Go smile.gif

Hesperiidae
Erynnis tages
Pyrgus malvae
Carterocephalus palaemon
Thymelicus sylvestris
Thymelicus lineola
Thymelicus acteon
Ochlodes sylvanus
Hesperia comma

Papilionidae
Papilio machaon

Pieridae
Leptidea reali
Leptidea sinapis only in Ireland
Pieris brassicae
Pieris rapae
Pieris napi
Anthocharis cardamines
Colias crocea
Gonepteryx rhamni

Lycaenidae
Glaucopsyche arion
Cupido minimus
Celastrina argiolus
Lycaena phlaeas
Callophrys rubi
Satyrium w-album
Satyrium pruni
Neozephyrus quercus
Thecla betulae is extinct but has been successfully reintroduced.
Plebejus argus
Plebejus agestis
Plebejus artaxerxes
Polyommatus icarus
Polyommatus bellargus
Polyommatus coridon
Hamearis lucina

Nymphalidae
Argynnis paphia
Argynnis adippe
Argynnis aglaja
Boloria selene
Boloria euphrosyne
Melitaea cinxia
Melitaea athalia
Euphydryas aurinia
Vanessa atalanta
Vanessa cardui
Aglais urticae
Inachis io
Polygonia c-album
Limenitis camilla
Apatura iris
Pararge aegeria
Lasiommata megera
Coenonympha pamphilus
Coenonympha tullia
Pyronia tithonus
Maniola jurtina
Aphantopus hyperanthus
Erebia aethiops
Erebia epiphron
Melanargia galathea
Hipparchia semele

Rare migrants include Iphiclides podalirius, Pontia daplidice, Colias hyale, C. alfacariensis, Lampides boeticus, Cupido argiades, Issoria lathonia, Vanessa virginiensis, Nymphalis polychloros, N. antiopa, and Danaus plexippus.

As a regular delivery in recent years -- Cacyreus marshalli

Extinct as residents : Aporia crataegi, Lycaena dispar, Polyommatus semiargus, Nymphalis polychloros.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 08.10.2007 19: 42
Likes: 2

08.10.2007 16:18, Ilia Ustiantcev

Oe is not easy-a-a-a. I still like the Moscow region fauna better. I shouldn't have been jealous. And Latonia is a migrant. I don't think that the species that flies here at the end of September only flies to warmer Britain.

08.10.2007 16:30, Vlad Proklov

Oe is not easy-a-a-a. I still like the Moscow region fauna better. I shouldn't have been jealous. And Latonia is a migrant. I don't think that the species that flies here at the end of September only flies to warmer Britain.

Maybe humidity isn't good enough. It's not just the temperature that limits propagation smile.gif

And in terms of diversity it's really sparse frown.gif

09.10.2007 0:25, RippeR

Hm.. But there are some very interesting things.. for example, Lampides boeticus.. I wonder if he migrates, I wonder why he doesn't migrate to us confused.gif eek.gif

09.10.2007 0:54, Vlad Proklov

Hm.. But there are some very interesting things.. for example, Lampides boeticus.. I wonder if he migrates, I wonder why he doesn't migrate to us confused.gif  eek.gif

Well, migrants. boeticus is known from Romania and the Odessa region, and you can probably find it here.
But in England it flies extremely rarely, it is pointless to go here for it smile.gif

From interesting things for residents of the former Soviet Union. But here, perhaps, only Erebia epiphron and Plebejus (Aricia) artaxerxes (real, not P. (A.) allous). Well, Thymelicus acteon and Pyronia tithonus - but these can also be found in the Mediterranean.

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 09.10.2007 00: 55
Likes: 2

09.10.2007 10:31, Guest

Hm.. But there are some very interesting things.. for example, Lampides boeticus.. I wonder if he migrates, I wonder why he doesn't migrate to us confused.gif  eek.gif

This fall, boeticus is quite common in some places of the Crimea, near Odessa it was regularly caught in the past years. The species is more common in agrocenoses and in urban areas. So look for it, good luck!
Likes: 1

09.10.2007 19:12, lepidopterolog

  Plebejus (Aricia) artaxerxes (real, not P. (A.) allous).

Vlad, please clarify the situation with allous and artaxerxes : in many works, these species are reduced to synonyms to each other (for example, Stradomsky cites allous as a synonym for artaxerxes, and Korshunov-on the contrary). So, are they really two different views?

09.10.2007 19:23, Vlad Proklov

Vlad, please clarify the situation with allous and artaxerxes : in many works, these species are reduced to synonyms to each other (for example, Stradomsky cites allous as a synonym for artaxerxes, and Korshunov-on the contrary). So, are they really two different views?

When synonyms are used, it's just wrong: they look different. Artaxerxes-endemic to Scotland and northern England, it has white discal spots on the top of the forewings - and there is also no black dot at the bottom (at the end of the cell).

The alleus is as we know it, although there are known specimens from Sweden that resemble the Scottish ones. I don't know if experiments were made on crossing artaxerxes with alleus-so they are different species, or subspecies of the same-it is not clear. I somehow like their separation better, they look so different.

09.10.2007 19:26, Vlad Proklov

Here is the real P. (A.) artaxerxes:
http://www.wild-scotland.org.uk/cmsimages/...cropped_421.JPG
Likes: 3

09.10.2007 20:34, AntSkr

Can anyone give lists of all subspecies of European crested whales (Notodontidae)(there is a list of the species themselves, we are interested in subspecies and, preferably, forms), preferably with the distribution of the subspecies.
A similar request is made for the cocoonworms of Europe.

10.10.2007 11:44, Guest

Alleus is still a subspecies of Artaxerxes - when studying the entire range of the species, this conclusion is logical.

29.11.2007 23:23, okoem

List of moths of Ukraine
Likes: 4

01.12.2007 12:32, PG18

When synonyms are used, it's just wrong: they look different. Artaxerxes-endemic to Scotland and northern England, it has white discal spots on the top of the forewings - and there is also no black dot at the bottom (at the end of the cell).
The alleus is as we know it, although there are known specimens from Sweden that resemble the Scottish ones. I don't know if experiments were made on crossing artaxerxes with alleus-so they are different species, or subspecies of the same-it is not clear. I somehow like their separation better, they look so different.

Vlad, I don't think many people hold that opinion anymore. Well, unless it's an endemic SUBSPECIES. In general, the appearance/disappearance of a light discal spot is pure genetics. As far as I remember (like from Seitz, 1929-1932 and "Butterflies of Scandinavia in nature"), such specimens, in the form of a rare morph, are also found in other countries of Western and Northern Europe. The situation seems to me similar to that of Eumedon. Everywhere in mainland Eurasia, it has a predominant form with a ray, and the rayless form (f. fylgia) is rare everywhere, except in Kamchatka, where all eumedons without a ray without exception...
Likes: 1

10.12.2007 17:08, Ilia Ustiantcev

And no one will tell you what butterflies are approximately found on Novaya Zemlya?

11.12.2007 3:05, Vlad Proklov

And no one will tell you what butterflies are approximately found on Novaya Zemlya?

From interesting things to go there - Colias nastes zemblica and Xestia lyngei.

Dima Blinky seems to have gone there , and we should ask him what's flying there. Hardly much smile.gif
Likes: 2

18.12.2007 13:15, bora

Regarding A. artaxerxes:
Compare the discal spots of specimens from north-west England and the Caucasus.

Pictures:
picture: A.artaxerxes..jpg
A.artaxerxes..jpg — (132.54к)

29.12.2007 23:31, Ilia Ustiantcev

Does Oecophora bractella occur in the MO?

29.12.2007 23:35, Vlad Proklov

Does Oecophora bractella occur in the MO?

No, it is known in Russia only from the Kaliningrad region.
Likes: 1

15.01.2008 7:06, Svyatoslav Knyazev

Maybe someone (for examplesmile.gif, kotbegemot) has a list of bulavousykh Astrakhan region?! I would be very grateful!

15.01.2008 17:47, Vlad Proklov

Maybe someone (for examplesmile.gif, kotbegemot) has a list of bulavousykh Astrakhan region?! I would be very grateful!


Pzhlstsmile.gif:

Family Hesperiidae.
1. Erynnis tages
2. Carcharodus alceae
3. Carcharodus lavatherae
4. Muschampia tessellum
5. Pyrgus malvae
6. Pyrgus carthami
7. Pyrgus armoricanus
8. Pyrgus cinarae
9. Pyrgus alveus
10. Ochlodes faunus
11. Thymelicus lineola

Family Papilionidae.
1. Papilio machaon
2. Iphiclides podalirius
3. Zerynthia polyxena
4. Parnassius mnemosyne

Family Pieridae.
1. Leptidea sinapis
2. Aporia crataegi
3. Pieris brassicae
4. Pieris rapae
5. Pieris napi
6. Pontia edusa
7. Pontia chloridice
8. Euchloe ausonia
9. Zegris eupheme
10. Colias chrysotheme
11. Colias crocea
12. Colias erate
13. Colias hyale
14. Colias alfacariensis
15. Gonepteryx rhamni

Family Lycaenidae. Golubyanki.
1. Neozephyrus quercus
2. Satyrium (Nordmannia) acaciae
3. Satyrium (Fixsenia) pruni
4. Callophrys rubi
5. Callophrys chalybeitincta
6. Tomares callimachus
7. Lycaena (Lycaena) phlaeas
8. Lycaena (Thersamonolycaena) dispar
9. Lycaena (Thersamonia) thersamon
10. Lycaena (Heodes) tityrus
11. Lampides boeticus
12. Celastrina argiolus
13. Cupido (Everes) argiades
14. Cupido (Cupido) minimus
15. Scolitantides (Pseudophilotes) vicrama
16. Scolitantides (Rubrapterus) bavius
17. Scolitantides (Praephilotes) anthracias
18. Glaucopsyche alexis
19. Plebejus (Plebejus) argyrognomon
20. Plebejus (Plebejus) caspicus
21. Plebejus (Plebejus) idas
22. Plebejus (Plebejus) argus
23. Plebejus (Plebejides) pylaon
24. Plebejus (Aricia) agestis
25. Polyommatus (Agrodiaetus) damone
26. Polyommatus (Polyommatus) thersites
27. Polyommatus (Polyommatus) icarus
28. Polyommatus (Meleageria) coridon
29. Polyommatus (Meleageria) daphnis

Family Nymphalidae.
1. Argynnis (Argynnis) paphia
2. Argynnis (Pandoriana) pandora
3. Issoria lathonia
4. Brenthis daphne
5. Vanessa cardui
6. Vanessa atalanta
7. Inachis io
8. Aglais urticae
9. Nymphalis antiopa
10. Nymphalis polychloros
11. Nymphalis xanthomelas
12. Polygonia c-album
13. Euphydryas orientalis sareptensis
14. Melitaea (Melitaea) cinxia
15. Melitaea (Melitaea) phoebe - в области, вероятно, два вида этой группы (!)
16. Melitaea (Melitaea) trivia
17. Melitaea (Melitaea) didyma
18. Melitaea (Mellicta) aurelia
19. Neptis rivularis
20. Apatura metis
21. Apatura ilia
22. Lasiommata megera
23. Coenonympha pamphilus
24. Coenonympha leander
25. Coenonympha oedippus
26. Triphysa phryne
27. Maniola jurtina
28. Hyponephele lycaon
29. Hyponephele lupinus
30. Hyponephele huebneri
31. Proterebia afra
32. Melanargia galathea
33. Melanargia russiae
34. Kanetisa circe
35. Arethusana arethusa
36. Minois dryas
37. Satyrus ferula
38. Chazara briseis
39. Chazara persephone
40. Hipparchia fagi
41. Hipparchia autonoe
42. Hipparchia volgensis

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 17.01.2008 04: 55

15.01.2008 18:09, Svyatoslav Knyazev

15.01.2008 18:22, Guest

There is no Euphydryas orientalis on the territory of the USSR
.
In Aster. o. - Euphydryas (aurinia) sareptana
Well, according to melitea phoebe, everything is not so simple.
Likes: 1

15.01.2008 18:59, Ilia Ustiantcev

And where in the Tula region does Dryad fly? (someone closed the list of diaries there...)

This post was edited by Ilya U - 15.01.2008 19: 00

15.01.2008 19:18, Vlad Proklov

And where in the Tula region does Dryad fly? (someone closed the list of diaries there...)

It has become extinct there, and the northern border now runs along the Lipetsk Region.
The list, by the way, opened -- if someone needs it, I just don't have time to update it, and I'm mostly interested in micro-lepidoptera now...

16.01.2008 6:08, Svyatoslav Knyazev

Dear kotbegemot,
Do you have lists for all regions of the Russian Federation? I'm also interested in multi-moustaches and micro-moustaches! Especially in Siberia smile.gif

16.01.2008 6:29, Vlad Proklov

Dear kotbegemot,
Do you have lists for all regions of the Russian Federation? I'm also interested in multi-moustaches and micro-moustaches! Especially in Siberia smile.gif

Alas, no frown.gif
In many areas, they do not exist at all, or there are only old ones.
I just once collected several lists on bulavousym, so that each time I did not climb into several articles and put them on LiveJournal, hoping to meet people who are interested in it, and maybe get some additions. And now there is no time to deal with them.

16.01.2008 9:22, Svyatoslav Knyazev

16.01.2008 20:00, Vlad Proklov

Got it! If you need information about the Omsk region , I can send you information about bulavousy and higher raznousy. I'm still collecting material on micros...
By the way, I didn't find any lists on your LiveJournal... maybe I wasn't looking there? I'd like to read it. smile.gif


Yes, I'll find them there myself right now in the rubble... They are there under lock and key somewhere-i.e. if you register there and I add you to friends-then you can find them...

By the way, it would be interesting to get data on the Omsk region, but I have practically nothing on it. It would be advisable, however, for you to contact someone from the local specialists, raise the lit-ru, and publish an article...

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 16.01.2008 20: 02

16.01.2008 20:17, Svyatoslav Knyazev

Likes: 5

18.01.2008 21:02, guest: Илья У

It is strange somehow, deidamia penetrates even into the ER, and there it is not present...

18.01.2008 21:07, AntSkr

I publish a list to start bulavousykh Omsk region:

Do you have a list of different sawyers?

19.01.2008 6:35, Svyatoslav Knyazev

It is strange somehow, deidamia penetrates even into the ER, and there it is not present...

the nearest deidamia is found in the Altai region, but it is not found on our plain... Although, given that previously the closest location of Zegris eupheme was a point in Kazakhstan 500 km from the Omsk region, and then the population was found near Omsk, and not in the steppe (in the middle forest-steppe), miracles really happen wink.gif

19.01.2008 6:39, Svyatoslav Knyazev

Do you have a list of different sawyers?

got it! Here it is:
Arctiidae
1 Arctia caja (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Arctia flavia (Fuesslyi, 1779)
3 Chelis dahurica (Boisduval, 1832)
4 Coscinia cribraria (Linnaeus, 1758)
5 Diacrisia sannio (Linnaeus, 1758)
6 Epicallia villica (Linnaeus, 1758)
7 Eucharia festiva Hufn.
8 Hyphoraia aulica (Linnaeus, 1758)
9 Parasemia plantaginis (Linnaeus, 1758)
10 Pericallia matronula (Linnaeus, 1758)
11 Phragmatobia fuliginosa (Linnaeus, 1758)
12 Rhyparia purpurata (Linnaeus, 1758)
13 Sibirarctia kindermanni (Staudinger, 1867)
14 Spilarctia luteum (Hufnagel, 1766)
15 Spilosoma lubricipedum (Linnaeus, 1758)
16 Spilosoma urticae Esp.
17 Spiris striata (Linnaeus, 1758)
18 Tyria jacobaeae (Linnaeus, 1758)
19 Watsonarctia deserta (Bartel, 1902)

Sphingidae
1 Deilephila elpenor (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Deilephila porcellus (Linnaeus, 1758)
3 Hemaris fuciformis (Linnaeus, 1758)
4 Hemaris tityus (Linnaeus, 1758)
5 Hyles euphorbiae (Linnaeus, 1758)
6 Hyles gallii (Rottemburg, 1775)
7 Hyloicus morio (Rothschild et Jordan, 1903)
8 Laothoe amurensis (Staudinger, 1892)
9 Laothoe populi (Linnaeus, 1758)
10 Mimas tiliae (Linnaeus, 1758)
11 Proserpinus proserpina L.
12 Smerinthus caecus (Menetries, 1857)
13 Smerinthus ocellatus (Linnaeus, 1758)
14 Sphinx ligustri (Linnaeus, 1758)

Saturniidae
1 Aglia tau (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Eudia pavonia (Linnaeus, 1761)


Lasiocampidae
1 Dendrolimus pini (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Dendrolimus superans sibiricus (Tschetverikov, 1908)
3 Eriogaster lanestris L.
4 Euthrix potatoria (Linnaeus, 1758)
5 Gastropacha populifolia (Esper, 1784)
6 Gastropacha quercifolia (Linnaeus, 1758)
7 Lasiocampa quercus (Linnaeus, 1758)
8 Lasiocampa trifolii (Denis et Schiffermuller, 1775)
9 Macrothylacia rubi (Linnaeus, 1758)
10 Malacosoma castrensis (Linnaeus, 1758)
11 Malacosoma neustria (Linnaeus, 1758)
12 Odonestis pruni (Linnaeus, 1758)
13 Phyllodesma ilicifolium (Linnaeus, 1758)
14 Phyllodesma tremulifolium (Hubner, 1810)
15 Poecilocampa populi (Linnaeus, 1758)
16 Trichiura crataegi (Linaneus, 1758)

Endromididae
1 Endromis versicolora (Linnaeus, 1758)

Lemoniidae
1 Lemonia taraxaci (Denis et Schiffermuller, 1775)

Notodontidae
1 Cerura erminea (Esper, 1783)
2 Cerura vinula (Linnaeus, 1758)
3 Clostera albosigma (Fitch, 1855)
4 Clostera anastomosis (Linnaeus, 1758)
5 Clostera curtula (Linnaeus, 1758)
6 Clostera pigra (Hufnagel, 1766)
7 Furcula bicuspis (Borkhausen, 1790)
8 Furcula bifida (Brahm, 1787)
9 Furcula furcula (Clerck, 1759)
10 Gluphisia crenata (Esper, 1785)
11 Leucodonta bicoloria (Denis et Schiffermüller, 1775)
12 Notodonta dromedarius (Linnaeus, 1767)
13 Notodonta torva (Hubner, 1803)
14 Notodonta tritophus (Denis et Schiffermüller, 1775)
15 Notodonta tritophus phoebe (Siebert, 1790)
16 Notodonta ziczac (Linnaeus, 1758)
17 Odontosia carmelita (Esper, 1790)
18 Odontosia sieversii (Menetries, 1856)
19 Phalera bucephala (Linnaeus, 1758)
20 Pheosia gnoma (Fabricius, 1777) =dictaeoides
21 Pheosia tremula (Clerck, 1759)
22 Pterostoma palpina (Clerck, 1759)
23 Ptilodon capucina (Linnaeus, 1758) =camelina
24 Pygaera timon (Hübner, 1803)
25 Stauropus fagi (Linnaeus, 1758)


Lymantriidae
1 Calliteara pudibunda (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Dicallomera fascelina (Linnaeus, 1758)
3 Euproctis chrysorrhoea L.
4 Euproctis similis (Fuessly, 1775)
5 Leucoma salicis (Linnaeus, 1758)
6 Lymantria dispar (Linnaeus, 1758)
7 Lymantria monacha (Linnaeus, 1758)
8 Orgyia antiqua L.
9 Orgyia gonostigma (Fabricius, 1775)

Drepanidae
1 Drepana curvatula (Borkhausen, 1790)
2 Drepana falcataria (Linnaeus, 1758)
3 Falcaria lacertinaria (Linnaeus, 1758)
4 Sabra harpagula (Esper, 1786)

Tetheidae
1 Achlya flavicornis (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Ochropacha duplaris (Linnaeus, 1761)
3 Tethea ocularis (Linnaeus, 1767)
4 Tethea or (Denis et Schiffermuller, 1775)
5 Tetheella fluctuosa (Hubner, [1803] 1796)
6 Thyatira batis (Linnaeus, 1758)

Lithosiidae
1 Atolmis rubricollis (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Cybosia mesomella (Linnaeus, 1758)
3 Eilema deplanum (Esper, 1787)
4 Eilema griseola Hb.
5 Eilema lutarellum (Linnaeus, 1758)
6 Eilema sororculum (Hufnagel, 1766)
7 Eilema unita Hb.
8 Miltochrista miniata (Forster, 1771)
9 Pelosia muscerda (Hufnagel, 1766)
10 Setina irrorella (Linnaeus, 1758)

Cossiidae
1 Cossus cossus (Linnaeus, 1758)
2 Lamellocossus terebra (Denis et Schiffermuller, 1775)
3 Phragmataecia castanea (Hubner, 1790)

Sesiidae
1 Paranthrene tabaniformis (Rottemburg, 1775)
2 Sesia apiformis (Clerck, 1759)
3 Sesia culiciformis L.
4 Synanthedon formicaeformis (Esper, 1783)
5 Synanthedon scoliaeformis (Borkhausen, 1789)
6 Synanthedon tipuliformis (Clerck, 1759)


Syntomidae
1 Syntomis caspia (Staudinger, 1877)

Psychidae
1 Canaephora unicolor Hufn.

Hepialidae
1 Hepialus humuli (Linnaeus, 1758)

Thyrididae
1 Thyris fenestrella (Scopoli, 1763)
Likes: 6

19.01.2008 6:40, Svyatoslav Knyazev

scoops/moths are still at the stage of material accumulation, so I don't post them.

This post was edited by Konung - 19.01.2008 06: 41

20.02.2008 23:43, Vlad Proklov

Here, compiled on the basis of Sirotkin et al. List of macro-lepidoptera of the Moscow region -- the whole system is old there, there are errors corrected in later literature, etc. I tried to do it "in a modern way" here, additions/corrections are welcome.

We can discuss it right here smile.gif

This post was edited by kotbegemot - 02/20/2008 23: 50
Likes: 6

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